different between cade vs hade
cade
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ke?d/
- Rhymes: -e?d
Etymology 1
From Middle English cade, kad, kod, ultimately of unknown origin.
Adjective
cade (not comparable)
- (of an animal) abandoned by its mother and reared by hand
Verb
cade (third-person singular simple present cades, present participle cading, simple past and past participle caded)
- To bring up or nourish by hand, or with tenderness; to coddle; to tame.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Johnson to this entry?)
Noun
cade (plural cades)
- An animal brought up or nourished by hand.
Etymology 2
Borrowed from Middle French cade or Old Occitan cade, from Latin catanum.
Noun
cade (plural cades)
- western prickly juniper, Juniperus oxycedrus, whose wood yields a tar.
Translations
Etymology 3
Borrowed from Middle French cade (“barrel”), from Latin cadus (“bottle, jar”).
Noun
cade (plural cades)
- (archaic) A cask or barrel.
- A cade of herrings was a vessel containing 500 herrings, while a cade of sprats contained 1,000.
Usage notes
- Used in the British Book of Rates for a determinate number of some sort of fish.
References
This article incorporates content from the 1728 Cyclopaedia, a publication in the public domain.
Anagrams
- CEDA, aced, dace, deca-, ecad
Interlingua
Verb
cade
- present of cader
- imperative of cader
Italian
Verb
cade
- third-person singular present of cadere
Anagrams
- ceda
- deca
Latin
Verb
cade
- second-person singular present active imperative of cad?
Noun
cade
- vocative singular of cadus
Northern Kurdish
Etymology
From Arabic ????? (j?da).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /d?????d?/
Noun
cade f (Arabic spelling ?????)
- road, street
Declension
Derived terms
cade From the web:
- what cadence means
- what cadence is v to i
- what cadence is iv to i
- what cadence should i run at
- what cadence ends on vi
- what cadence is vii to i
- what cadence ends on iv
- what cadence is v to vi
hade
English
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /he?d/
- (Scotland) IPA(key): /hed/
Etymology 1
From Middle English hade, had, hod, hed, from Old English h?d (“person, individual, character, individuality, degree, rank, order, office, holy office, condition, state, nature, character, form, manner, sex, race, family, tribe, choir”), from Proto-Germanic *haiduz (“appearance, kind”), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)k?y- (“light, bright, shining”). Cognate with Old Saxon h?d (“condition, rank”), Old High German heit (“person, personality, sex, condition, quality, rank”), Old Norse heiðr ("honour, dignity") (whence Danish hæder (“honour”), Swedish heder (“honour”)), Gothic ???????????????????????? (haidus, “way, manner”). Same as -hood.(Can this(+) etymology be sourced?)
Alternative forms
- had, haid (Scotland)
- hod, hode
Noun
hade (plural hades)
- (now chiefly dialectal, Scotland) State; order, estate, rank, degree, or quality.
Etymology 2
Origin uncertain. Perhaps from a dialectal form of head.
Verb
hade (third-person singular simple present hades, present participle hading, simple past and past participle haded)
- (geology, mining) To slope or incline from the vertical.
- 1935, Institution of Mining Engineers (Great Britain), Transactions, page 60:
- It was found, however, that where the coal haded away from the floor towards the face, as in Fig. 2(6), [...]
- 1967, Mining and Minerals Engineering:
- The author details the benefits arising from arranging the quarry faces to be haded backwards at say 20-25° off vertical and to be of reasonable height, say 50-60ft. These include the reduction of danger ...
- 2000, Lindsey Porter, John Albert Robey, The Copper & Lead Mines Around the Manifold Valley, North Staffordshire:
- Plot's observation that the veins haded to the north-east is consistent with the workings around Stone Quarry Mine but not the main Ecton Pipe at depth nor the mines from Clayton Pipe southwards.
- 1935, Institution of Mining Engineers (Great Britain), Transactions, page 60:
Noun
hade (plural hades)
- (geology) A slope; (in mining) the slope of a vein, fault or dike from the vertical; the complement of the dip.
- 1612, Michael Drayton, Poly-Olbion, quoted in 1914, William Holden Hutton, Highways and Byways in Shakespeare's Country, page 34:
- The thick and well-growne fogge doth matt my smoother shades,
- And on the lower Leas, as on the higher Hades
- The daintie Clover growes (of grass the onely silke)
- That makes each Udder strout abundantly with milke.
- 1885, The Rainbow, a magazine of Christian literature, volume 22, page 449:
- [...] as he must have done who had proudly passed by Lazarus on earth when he looked up and beheld how he was honoured in the higher hades.
- 1935, Institution of Mining Engineers (Great Britain), Transactions, page 60:
- [...] due to the breaks at different hades, the projection might occur at any point from the floor to halfway up the seam.
- 1612, Michael Drayton, Poly-Olbion, quoted in 1914, William Holden Hutton, Highways and Byways in Shakespeare's Country, page 34:
Etymology 3
Probably a dialectal or variant form of head.
Noun
hade (plural hades)
- (Britain, dialects, obsolete) A headland; a strip of land at the side of a field upon which a plough may be turned.
- 1615, in a Map in Corpus Christi College, Oxon, quoted in Wright's English Dialect Dictionary:
- [...] certeine arable landes some of them havinge hades of meadow and grasse grounde lieinge in the Southe fielde of Einsham.
- 1635, Terrier, quoted in Wright's English Dialect Dictionary:
- 6 rodes with hades at both ends. 2 Landes 4 ro. with hades.
- 1534 [original], Anthony Fitzherbert, Husbandry, republished as Ancient Tracts concerning the Management of landed Property, republished, in The Monthly Review, or Journal (1767), page 270:
- And oxen wyl plowe in tough cley [...] And whereas is now suerall pastures, there the horse plowe is better, for the horses may be teddered, or tyed upon leys, balkes, or hades, whereas oxen may not be kept: and it is used to tedder them, but in fewe places.
- 1955,Ecclesiastical Terriers of Warwickshire Parishes, volume 22, page 36:
- [Item] . . . . . [w]th hades at both endes in the furlong called longe Furlonge of Thomas Vades on the north side and the aforesaide Mr [Bury] [so]wth side.
- 1615, in a Map in Corpus Christi College, Oxon, quoted in Wright's English Dialect Dictionary:
References
- hade at OneLook Dictionary Search
- hade in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
Anagrams
- -head, DHEA, Head, ahed, head
Bikol Central
Noun
hade
- king
Czech
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [??ad?]
Noun
hade
- vocative singular of had
Danish
Etymology
From Old Norse hata.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ha?d?/, [?hæ?ð?]
- Homophone: havde
- Rhymes: -a?d?
Verb
hade (imperative had, infinitive at hade, present tense hader, past tense hadede, perfect tense har hadet)
- to hate
Conjugation
References
- “hade” in Den Danske Ordbog
Japanese
Romanization
hade
- R?maji transcription of ??
- R?maji transcription of ??
Middle English
Etymology 1
From Old English h?d.
Noun
hade
- Alternative form of hod
Etymology 2
From Old English h?afod.
Noun
hade
- Alternative form of heed
Norwegian Bokmål
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?ha?d?/
Noun
hade
- Alternative form of ha det
Swedish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /²had??/
Verb
hade
- past tense of ha.
- past tense of hava.
hade From the web:
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- what hades looks like
- what hadestown character are you
- what hades means
- what hades gif
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